By Graham Reid
Writing against the tenor of these times, let it be said that sometimes there's no particular advantage in being first. Take Detroit's MC5. Essentially they made snotty, loud, politicised rock'n'roll.
Like the Clash?
Sort of - except of their era, which was, unfortunately for them, the confusing period at the start of which Magical Mystery Tour coincided with the Velvet Underground, and the end of which Kansas was fighting it out on the charts with the Osmonds. Musically challenged times, we might say.
Politically, however, it was ripe with targets. MC5 took theirs as Amerika.
Revolution in the streets was that far away.
On paper they had it all, even for an audience thirtysomething years later if you believe the British and American critics writing celebratory articles to coincide with the release of the single-disc compilation The Big Bang! The Best of MC5.
But MC5 were of that time way before punk and hip-hop, and the musical landscape was very different. Some of their primal, occasionally sax-honk embellished, blue-collar rock'n'roll can be alarmingly underwhelming.
The Big Bang! kicks off with their early singles I Can Only Give You Everything, Looking At You and the B-side I Just Don't Know.
Terrific noise, but if they hadn't become politicised, they are a good argument that MC5 might simply have ended up on a Nuggets collection today alongside the Seeds, the Electric Prunes and the Sonics whom they sometimes sound like.
In their final years they threw funky r'n'b horns and their free jazz, noisecore inclinations into the mix alongside their garage punk, and sounded like an outtake from a John Lennon/Elephant's Memory Band session.
(If you get the reference, enough said. If you don't there's a part of Lennon's career you really don't want to know about, believe me.)
However, mostly MC5 provided bar-wrecking r'n'b rock and their heroes were Little Richard and Chuck Berry. Sheer visceral, uninhibited four-chord noise, and West Coast hippies hated them. As the Ramones would do a decade later, they sang knowing, adolescent pop (Teenage Lust, High School.)
Their politicised middle years, however, set them apart. Famously MC5 - which included Fred "Sonic" Smith, later to become "Mr Patti" - had manager/political mentor John Sinclair, whose White Panther party preached "dope and [sexual intercourse] in the streets," as he so eloquently put it.
Today various MC5 members talk about putting a bullet through Sinclair's brain for all the help he was.
Politically they were as relevant then as Atari Teenage Riot are now. Interpret that how you will.
As the Clash would do later, they adopted revolutionary poses (ammunition belts, insolent sneers) and they covered Chuck Berry's Back in the USA with the same affectionate understanding the Clash covered I Fought the Law.
Their finest moment was the live 69 Kick Out The Jams album. The title track came with the Oedipal Expletive, almost a year before Jefferson Airplane's equally expletive We Can Be Together and 20 years before gangsta rap.
Revolutionary? In 69, you betcha.
Kick Out The Jams - four tracks of which form the centrepiece of The Big Bang! - is a classic live album alongside those by Dr Feelgood, the Stooges and Thin Lizzy.
But don't feel if bad you, unlike Famous International Rock Writers it seems, haven't heard Jams. Like Big Star, the Velvets and a dozen other bands from the period, MC5 suffered public indifference and abysmal albums sales. And, let's be honest, some scathing contemporary critical opinion.
In the furore following Jams they were dropped by their label, parted from Sinclair, and recorded Back in the USA with novice producer Jon Landau, who later became editor of Rolling Stone and discoverer of Bruce Springsteen Inc.
Back in the USA was a fine album, the evidence is the eight bristling tracks on The Big Bang!
There was another album (High Times, five tracks on Big Bang!) and that was it. MC5: 1965-72, RIP.
MC5 were of their period and unless your rock'n'roll taste is catholic, The Big Bang!, exciting and rowdy though it is, can sound woefully dated. Musically they were of that thread of AmRock which includes Bob Seger (American Ruse) and early Lou Reed (Shakin Street). Except with "anti-establishment" lyrics.
They went against the tenor of the times and in some senses they were first. There just seemed no particular advantage in it.
* The Big Bang! Best of MC5 (Rhino/Warners) can be ordered through record stores now.
<i>Elsewhere</i> - Street fightin' band rocks on
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